Dayton Daily News

Officials: Hot spot now under control

Two Miami County nursing homes connected with at least 24 deaths; industry faces challenges.

- By Kaitlin Schroeder Staff Writer

A coronaviru­s outbreak at two Miami County nursing homes connected with at least 24 deaths was the first in Ohio in a long-term care facility but it is now under control, officials said.

A cluster of cases started in March at SpringMead­e Health Center in Tipp City and Koester Pavilion in Troy.

Dr. Prasuna Madireddy, medical director for Koester Pavilion and SpringMead­e Health Center, said as the first nursing home outbreak in Ohio, others have looked to them for guidance amid the ever-changing pandemic.

“When we took our first leap into this unknowingl­y, there was not a whole lot of guidance out there,” she said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Ohio Department of Health and Miami County Public Health provided the nursing homes guidance and support, Madireddy said.

The outbreak is controlled, but it’s not considered officially over by public health officials until

there is a 28-day gap without a

positive test. Some asymptotic residents are still testing positive, Madireddy.

Increased testing, including testing for antibodies, has helped contain the spread, Madireddy said.

This outbreak speaks to the challenges nursing homes and assisted living facilities everywhere face as they struggle to keep the virus out, keep spirits up, source enough protective supplies and hold on to staff.

Nursing home residents are less than a half percent of the U.S. population but are at least one-third of COVID19 deaths in the U.S., according to a May 12 publicatio­n in Health Affairs.

About 70,000 Ohioans live in nursing homes and 42,000 live in various kinds of assisted living environmen­ts. More than 500 of them have died from COVID19, more than 4,000 have tested positive for the virus since April 15, and more than 1,800 positive cases have been reported among staff.

Since the state health department started collecting data April 15, the department has reported there have been 82 cumulative residents with cases at Koester and 59 at SpringMead­e as of May 14. Koester also has had 25 cumulative staff cases and SpringMead­e 24 cumulative staff, according to the state.

It is not possible to compare cases between nursing homes because testing was initially limited, and results were not formally collected and posted prior to April 15. Some facilities’ data also could be skewed higher because they have dedicated COVID-19 wings or have done mass testing that leads to increased case counts.

Testing is important with the coronaviru­s, because it can be the only way work- ers without symptoms will know if they need to stay home and isolate to prevent nursing home residents from getting sick.

Ohio has more testing capabiliti­es now, Madireddy said, and turnaround times are decreasing.

“So the capability of wide- spread testing is slowly increasing, not to the point where we want it yet, but slowly skilled nursing facil- ities are trying to test their residents more often than before,” Madireddy said.

The Miami County nursing homes also have been doing antibody testing through resources with Premier.

“We’re in a much better position because we know what we have within our facilities with the extra layer of antibody testing,” said India Williams, regional vice president of operations for AdCare Health Systems, which operates the Premier Health-affiliated nursing homes.

Emotional toll

The Miami County nurs- ing homes received an outpouring of community support, Williams said, from let- ters to flowers to restaurant­s delivering ice cream.

She said they also tried to provide psycho-social and emotional support to their staff through this time.

“A lot of them saw a lot of deaths or dying, declining residents,” Williams said.

Resident isolation has been a challenge with visi- tor restrictio­ns, and group activities and community dining stopped. Technology like FaceTime has helped, Williams said, as has taking residents outside more as the weather gets warmer.

One patient faced spending her 69th wedding anniversar­y apart from her husband for the first time ever. The care center arranged a special luncheon for the couple that also kept them safe.

“They sat between a window and they each had their favorite meal. She blew him a kiss when they saw each other. You have to say, ‘This is still their lives. And this is still memories and events that we have to celebrate, so how can we do that safely?’” Williams said.

Ohio Medicaid Director Maureen Corcoran said Tuesday at the state’s regular briefing that the state is working on a plan to be more aggressive on testing in long-term care centers. At first, nursing home test- ing was not ranked on the same priority level as hospi- tal testing, but the state gave a higher priority to nursing home testing in late April.

“This is not a sprint, this is a marathon. And we’re building structures and scaf- folding to provide the kind of both clinical support, as well as other support for the staff who work in these envi- ronments,” Corcoran said.

COVID-19 risks increase in congregate­d living communitie­s and for people with underlying health problems — and nursing homes have both of these factors.

Mary Sutton’s mother Vera Gudorf died at SpringMead­e Health Center on April 8. Many residents live for playing cards and getting out of their rooms, Sutton said, those small highlights they can’t have any more.

She understand­s why banning visitors and restrictin­g group activities was necessary, but said she also worries about the isolation of residents.

“I can see why they would want to clamp down because when people come in from the outside that’s the contaminat­ion. So that would be a tough call,” Sutton said.

Oversight limited

Chip Wilkins, long-term care ombudsman for the Dayton region, said his team commonly helps residents with issues like delays in call-light response, or getting enough time and assistance with eating dinner.

But now with the visitor restrictio­ns, the watchdog agency can’t go in and provide that advocacy across Ohio. He said the staff and volunteers are worried about problems building up at some places.

“This is the most frustrated that I have been as an ombudsman because I can’t get in to observe first hand what is going on,” Wilkins said.

For now, he said they have a team of about 40 volunteers who have a call list of the family contacts for all area nursing home residents. They are calling every fam- ily to see how they are doing and what communicat­ion they’ve had with the nurs- ing home.

“We are reassuring them that this is absolutely the safest thing for their loved ones, but we do want to know if their family member is having any issue and we have generated a lot of informatio­n that way,” Wilkins said.

Family members can reach the area ombudsman’s office — serving Montgomery, Preble, Greene, Clark, Miami, Darke, Logan, Shelby and Champaign counties — at 1-800-395-8267 or ombudsman@dayton-ombudsman. org. The office is also accept- ing volunteers.

Ongoing supply challenges

Terry Spitznagel, chief growth officer for United Church Homes, which has several area locations, said a call to action was when they heard about a nursing home in a different region where they had a positive case and then no one came into work that night. After that, they started doing practice COVID-19 case exercises.

“It started off as a way to make sure we knew how to use our PPE and it was prop- erly secured and available, but then it became something else, which was a way for us to be supportive of each other and know that this is as much of an emo- tional and anxiety-ridden challenge as it is a health care challenge,” she said.

Spitznagel said when the pandemic started, scammers called nursing homes saying they were selling desperatel­y needed supplies, including fake testing supplies. Other facilities had suppliers tell them they couldn’t deliver supplies until summer, she said.

For many of the personal protective equipment suppliers, she said prices are higher and quantities are limited, with nursing homes rationed to buy only 40% of what they ordered in the fourth quarter of 2019.

“So if you didn’t need anything in the fourth quarter of last year, you can order 40% of nothing,” Spitzna- gel said.

Widows Home director of nursing Tracey Behm said they received a donation of masks from Dayton Children’s Hospital at the beginning that helped them have what they need while they figured out how to get more.

“We actually made our own face shields — literally with a staple gun, and foam and elastic,” Behm said.

They have the supplies they need at the moment, she said, but they have to constantly plan ahead because it’s not as simple as order- ing more boxes when they start to run low.

“I’ve been a nurse for 30 years and I’ve never encoun- tered this type of situation by far,” Behm said.

COVID-19 risks increase in congregate­d living communitie­s and for people with underlying health problems — and nursing homes have both of these factors.

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